Waterloo Region Record

Black MPs, senators call for action on racism

Caucus urges justice reforms, support for arts and culture

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OTTAWA—A group of Black parliament­arians and their allies are calling on all levels of government to take action to reduce systemic racism in Canada.

The request came in a statement Tuesday from the Parliament­ary Black Caucus, which was created in 2015 and includes members of Parliament and senators from various political parties.

The statement included calls for concrete reforms to policing, justice and correction­s; targeting economic aid in the COVID-19 pandemic to Blackowned businesses and Black entreprene­urs; and supporting Black artists and institutio­ns devoted to Black culture.

“While Canada is a great country, for many Black Canadians it has yet to achieve its full potential,” the group said. “For more than 400 years, Black Canadians contribute­d to what all Canadians enjoy today, in spite of the legal, social, and economic barriers.

“In order for Canada to fully realize its potential, we must work to eradicate the consequenc­es of systemic discrimina­tion faced by Black Canadians.”

The list also includes ending mandatory minimum sentences for certain crimes. The Liberals promised to look at repealing some in their successful 2015 campaign but have not done so.

Liberal MP Greg Fergus, who chairs the Parliament­ary Black Caucus, said he doesn’t know why the government has not delivered on that promise.

“I can’t change the past, I just want to influence the present and the future,” he said in an interview.

“I’m pushing for it to be done now and I think there’s an appetite, I think there’s a big political appetite to do it.”

Besides eight MPs and senators who identify as Black, the statement was signed by dozens of other parliament­arians from the Liberal party, NDP and Greens, and multiple factions in the Senate.

In a statement of their own, the Conservati­ves accused the Liberals of playing “disgusting partisan games” by not inviting MPs from all parties to join.

“Conservati­ves acknowledg­e the existence of systemic racism in Canada; we condemn it and support calls to eliminate it,” spokespers­on Kelsie Chiasson said.

The Tories accused the Liberals of hypocrisy, noting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s history of donning blackface, his treatment of Indigenous former justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, and the presence of former Toronto police chief Bill Blair in the cabinet as public-safety minister.

Fergus said he didn’t seek out support from Conservati­ves for the statement because their leader, Andrew Scheer, refused to recognize the existence of systemic racism when asked about it multiple times during a recent television interview.

The Parliament­ary Black Caucus said non-Black people are only now realizing the scope of systemic racism in Canada, and the group is proposing a series of measures to cut down on what the group calls a “pernicious and widespread phenomenon.”

“The members of the Parliament­ary Black Caucus are heartened to see so many of their fellow citizens taking to the streets to peacefully express their desire for Canadian society to stamp out racism,” the group wrote.

“However, to rid our society of racism will require concrete actions by all levels of government to begin to make a difference.”

Trudeau welcomed the calls without committing to implementi­ng any of them in particular.

“We are committed to moving forward on a huge range of measures. We’re working with communitie­s, we’re working with leaders like members of the Parliament­ary Black Caucus to identify what exactly we need to move forward on first in priority on,” he said in his daily appearance outside his residence at Rideau Cottage.

“I think it’s really important that we all come forward and look at bold ideas that we can take on very soon to fix the systemic discrimina­tion that continues to exist in our country.”

 ?? JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Liberal MP Greg Fergus, chair of the Parliament­ary Black Caucus, says there is currently “a big political appetite” for ending mandatory minimum sentences for certain crimes.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Liberal MP Greg Fergus, chair of the Parliament­ary Black Caucus, says there is currently “a big political appetite” for ending mandatory minimum sentences for certain crimes.

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